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Few entertainers can tug at our heartstrings quite as much asDolly Parton.

She memorably threatens to take action if he doesn’t discontinue the innuendo and rumors.

“I’ve been forgiving and forgetting because of the way I was brought up,” she says.

That’s definitely the case in 1984’sRhinestone, which features her as a successful country singer named Jake Farris.

To get him on stage, though, she has to offer up some serious self-deprecation.

When Nick then asks how she conquered her initial stagefright, she concedes, “I threw up.”

Truvy is a southern salon owner whose shop is the centerpiece for much of the film’s action.

I can do that any time."

After pointing out how visibly angry he is, Justice claims that he’s only upset with himself.

I watched my mama go through this, and I swore this would never happen to me."

When Justice replies that “everybody fights,” Thiola responds simply, “Everybody don’t hit.”

Straight Talk

Another classic Dolly Parton performance can be found in the 1992 rom-comStraight Talk.

The film features Parton as down-on-her-luck dance teacher Shirlee Kenyon.

Suddenly, Shirlee finds herself live on-air, answering calls from people in need of advice.

After just a few technical hiccups, Shirlee quickly acclimates to the job.

With Parton’s sugary warm voice behind them, every line she says in the scene is perfectly imperfect.

But it’s her initial return to Earth that’s truly unforgettable.

“Very funny,” she chuckles.

Multiple flashback scenes sprinkled throughout the film show us exactly how Leana’s father mistreated her and her mother.

In the present day, she must make the decision to escape Hank before it’s too late.

“You saw how he acted.

How could you pretend it was just nothing?”

“How could you just sit and do nothing about it?”

She becomes convinced this Parton is an imposter who must be questioned.

After a chase, Hart physically leaps to tackle Parton in the busy shopping hub of the Venetian Resort.

After Hart has Parton pinned to the ground, she attempts to begin her questioning.

But Parton has something to say first: “What is the matter with you?”

It’s then that she finally realizes her mistake and asks Parton why she ran away.

At that point, Parton states the obvious: “Because some crazy woman was chasing me!”

The competition between the two women intensifies, and G.G.

eventually confronts Vi during her restaurant shift, with some truly rambunctious results.

After Vi implies that G.G.

is phony inside and out and is only angry that she can’t charm Vi into submission, G.G.

goes on the offensive to stage a good old-fashioned food fight.

“It is your holier-than-thou, pious, rigid self-righteousness,” she says between bread tosses.

“Who gives a rat’s a** if I’ve got a few nips and tucks?

God didn’t make plastic surgeons so they could starve.”

If that all isn’t deliciously messy enough, once G.G.